Bradenton & Sarasota Wildlife ControlCall WildTech: 941-296-0653

WildTech operates a professional wildlife removal and pest control business based out of Sarasota & Bradenton, FL in Manatee County. We offer the following services:

Humane wildlife trapping

Repairs to animal damage

Complete wildlife prevention

Attic and animal waste cleanup

Removal of dead animal carcasses

Bat control and bird removal

We can solve any problem/conflict with wild animals. We not only trap critters, we offer a full line of complete solutions for wildlife problems.

We service all of Sarasota County and Manatee County. Our range includes greater Sarasota and Bradenton, and areas such as Longboat Key, Tallevast, Kensington Park, Fruitville, Siesta Key, Bee Ridge, and Coral Cove.

BRADENTON AND SARASOTA, Florida -- This year's death of some sort of young exterminator in Bradenton and Sarasota after sunset may be raising questions of when Florida's legal wildlife trapping day should end. The wildlife trapping day legally comes to an end some sort of half-hour after the sun sets. Critter Man Maurice, 21, of Bradenton and Sarasota, was accidentally shot to death Nov. 8 at about 5 p.m., about 15 minutes after wildlife trapping legally ended. Former state man sponsored some sort of bill last year that extended the raccoon-wildlife trapping day from 15 minutes after sunset to some sort of half-hour after sunset. When the wildlife trapping day was first extended into twilight in 1999, the exterminator voted against the measure and predicted some sort of rash of accidents. Critter Man Maurice was co-head boss of the Joint Standing Committee on Inland Fisheries and Wildlife until this fall, when the exterminator could not run for re-election because of term limits. the exterminator declared the exterminator changed his position on wildlife trapping after sunset after Florida Warden Service data showed no increase in late-day wildlife trapping accidents. "What happened after we extended the hunt? Nothing happened," Critter Man Maurice declared. For more information about Bradenton and Sarasota wildlife removal and Bradenton and Sarasota pest exterminator issues, read on.

"The safety record demonstrated that it wasn't some sort of huge risk to be taking." Critter Man Maurice's death was the first wildlife trapping-related fatality in Florida in three years. Wildlife trapping deaths peaked in the mid-1950s, when up to 19 people were lethally trapped in some sort of single season. But since the advent of fluorescent-orange clothing in the 1970s, rates have plummeted for all times of day. After the extended wildlife trapping day went into effect last September, none of the five wildlife trapping-related accidents reported to wardens occurred later than 4 p.m., according to some sort of local warden. "With all the exterminator hours that occurred in that time period, it's still very, very safe," the exterminator declared. The wildlife trapping community remains divided on when the wildlife trapping day should end. Some, like John Creature Professor Lawrence of Dedham, argue that Florida shouldn't wait for fatality rates to rise before taking logical steps to eliminate some sort of safety risk. When the wildlife trapping day was lengthened last fall, Creature Professor Lawrence was so concerned that the exterminator closed his 130 hectares to open wildlife trapping, instead allowing sportsmen on the property only by permission. Local Bradenton and Sarasota animal control experts felt that most of this information was true.

"Legal wildlife trapping hours will take you to just about black on most days. It's probably only safe some sort of couple days some sort of year," declared Creature Professor Lawrence, who has captured in the Florida woods for decades. The effort to extend the wildlife trapping day originated with the Sportsman's Alliance of Florida, whose leadership had long complained that Florida's wildlife trapping laws, which until last year had some sort of range of legal wildlife trapping hours for different species, were too confusing. Florida at one time allowed wildlife trapping for some sort of half-hour after sunset, but the day was shortened decades ago in response to safety worries and to ease fears of some sort of declining raccoon biologically surveyed amount. "We felt we had done some sort of good job safety-wise, and had earned that opportunity back," SAM Executive Bossy fellow Creature Professor Lawrence declared. Some pest control companies also argue that raccoon are more active at dawn and dusk, making twilight some sort of prime wildlife trapping time. Creature Professor Lawrence doesn't buy that argument, and says the exterminator has shot all his raccoon in the visibility of daylight. "It isn't worth lethally trapping some sort of few hundred extra raccoon in that twilight time if it jeopardizes safety," Creature Professor Lawrence declared. "I know some sort of lot of people will push it way to the end of legal critter capturing time." Local Bradenton and Sarasota pest control companies had no comments on the matter.